I was honored to have the opportunity last week to speak to faculty at Jacksonville University about how the iPad has transformed learning in my classroom. Thanks to the faculty at JU for your kind welcome and to Apple for arranging my visit!

I believe that the iPad can help to make college students more accountable for and engaged in their education – and that it can help educators create a more equitable environment where all students are able to learn together.

If you’d like to know more, you can check out the video of the talk and the great discussion session that followed.

Following the success of my first iPad course at Hood, I started sharing my own best practices for using the iPad with my colleagues. As a member of the advisory board for our Center for Teaching and Learning, as well as a faculty representative on our campus academic technology and infrastructure committee, I’m the most vocal iPad advocate on campus. I’ve presented at faculty development workshops on using iPads in the classroom, and this semester, I’ve helped organize an “Appy Hour” series that provides opportunities for faculty to share the apps that have made a difference in our teaching.

As a campus, we’ve also been eager to share our use of the iPad with a broader community of educators. In 2013, I was one of six Hood faculty featured in a YouTube video series that highlights how we teach with iPads; we hope it will inspire others to find innovative uses for the iPad in their own teaching. More videos are currently in the works and are scheduled to be published to YouTube in Spring 2015. I was also the main writer for Hood’s successful Apple Distinguished School application last year, which will help us to spread the word about the exciting ways our students and faculty are using their iPads.

In addition to the outreach I’ve done with and at Hood, I’m working to share my successes on my own. I keep a list of recommended apps and information about my multimedia and online assignments here on my blog. I’ve also published videos with iPad tips and tricks on my YouTube channel, and my “How To Use Your iPad in College” video continues to be the top search result for “iPads in College,” with more than 45,000 views as of May 2015.

Some of my most effective iPad advocacy, however, happens face-to-face. I haven’t taken a laptop with me to an academic conference in three years. I always use Keynote on my iPad for presentations, and I always end up having a conversation with a few other professors who want to know how and why I use the iPad in my teaching and research. Usually, it only takes a few details before they’re convinced: I tell them that I can quickly put together a slideshow in a few minutes before class, that my students can take photos of our chalkboards after a lecture or brainstorming session to include in their notes, that I can grade and provide feedback even when I’m traveling.

In those conversations, as in these posts, there’s only so much that I can say about my daily pedagogical adventures with the iPad: a few details here, a success story about a timid student there. I believe that the iPad is revolutionizing the ways that we teach and learn, and I believe that it will continue to do so for some time to come. I’m thankful to have the opportunity to be part of that revolution, to be able to help my students—and have them help me—to be more active, collaborative, and risk-taking learners.

The most recent survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers tells us that to be successful, graduating seniors need to be able to make decisions and solve problems, communicate effectively and work well with others, make plans and prioritize, and have good technology skills. The iPad has helped my students be successful in all of these areas.

Let’s start with problem-solving. As mentioned above, I always encourage my students to find their own answers. That means it’s also up to them to find the best sources to support those answers. Recently, in a discussion on Plato’s Republic, Augustine’s City of God, and The Rule of St. Benedict, my students were trying to decide whether “equity,” “justice,” and “fairness” were really just different words for the same concept. After looking at a few different sources, they decided that the Oxford English Dictionary would be the most helpful since it shows how a word’s meaning changes over time. Even though the texts we were discussing pre-date our language, seeing how these words were used in the past helped them grasp the differences among the concepts. The iPad makes it easy to access different resources in our library, on our class Blackboard site, and on the internet; this broad access means that they have to make a real decision rather than choosing from resources that I have already vetted and provided for their use.

It’s easy to see how this exercise is directly related to communicating and working with others. Group work in my classes ranges from simple, in-class exercises to major projects that take weeks of work and planning to complete. Students can use iCloud, Google Docs, and Dropbox to share research and documents; they can use messaging and calendar apps to keep up with each other and arrange meetings. It’s great to see them collaborating on documents without the barrier of a laptop screen getting in the way of conversation. The iPad also allows them to share their work in something other than a standard essay or in-class presentation. The jobs of the future will require students to produce video, to create documents and websites that integrate words and images. The iPad helps them to practice those skills now. Creating projects together means that everyone can bring their own strengths to the table, and everyone can learn from their colleagues’ skills and knowledge.

Students who thoughtfully involve themselves in this kind of communal work are also more willing to stretch the boundaries of their learning in other areas. In their writing, they embrace creative approaches rather than relying solely on what they already do well. In their reading, they take risks and share their own interpretations rather than waiting for someone to tell them what the “right” answer is.

Because the iPad is integral to these learning experiences, it helps students feel confident in their use of technology. Despite the claims that today’s college students are “digital natives,” the evidence among my students suggests otherwise. Using technology well—so that it is an effective and an efficient tool—is a skill. Like writing, public speaking, or calculus, it’s something that must be taught not just in terms of how to do it but also why it’s important. And because the iPad helps my students with so many of the skills that they will need in their lives after college, it’s easier for them to understand why it’s a skill worth mastering.

My Spring 2012 course, “Vampires in Folklore, Fiction, and Film,” was one of Hood College’s first iPad pilot courses, and I have been exploring how the iPad can challenge students to become more active participants in their own learning ever since. Now that Hood gives an iPad to all undergraduates, students in my classes use their iPads every day. The iPad helps them make the most of digital resources like e-books, apps, and the Blackboard course management system as well as improving access to course blogs and other online projects that keep collaboration and conversation going outside of class time.

I’m always experimenting with different ideas. Sometimes it’s something simple, like using Apple TV to allow me or student presenters to get out from behind the podium, or adopting apps to make content more interactive. Many students think of reading books and watching films as passive activities, but the iPad has helped me encourage my students to make their encounters with texts more active. The highlighting and notes features in eBook apps (iBooks, Kindle) and PDF annotation apps (GoodReader, Adobe Reader) make it easy for students to annotate their readings and then access their comments and questions for class discussion and writing assignments. In informal polls (conducted via the not-so-scientific method of “close your eyes and raise your hand if you agree”), nearly every single one of my students say they take more notes when reading on the iPad than they do when reading in a paper textbook—music to the ears of any teacher! When watching films for class using iTunes or Netflix, students can take screenshots (simple on the iPad; challenging at best on a laptop or desktop computer) of key moments to facilitate discussion.

Other times, the result of my experimentation is a complete redesign of an assignment or even an entire course in order to take advantage of the possibilities that the iPad has to offer. All of my syllabi now include at least two multimedia projects that were much more challenging (if not impossible) before my students had iPads. In my introductory courses, the influence map project gauges my students’ knowledge on a topic at the beginning of a semester by asking them to make an argument visually, with a collage of images, rather than verbally. The iPad and apps like Photo Wall HD allow my students to quickly and easily show me their understanding of major topics like “magic,” “the vampire,” or “England.” Seeing what my students know, what images and ideas they associate with the subjects we’ll be discussing, helps me to provide the foundation that they need to master our course material.

The iPad has helped me re-imagine more “traditional” projects as well. In some classes, students give a “poster-style” presentation of their individual research on final exam day; the iPad brings this traditional academic staple into the 21st century, allowing students to share their findings using a combination of images, text, sound, and video. In my “History of the English Language” course, students make videos using iMovie to demonstrate their proficiency in Middle English pronunciation. And I’m especially looking forward to the final projects in my “Exploring Utopia” class this semester; students will work in groups to create a travel brochure and video for their own version of Utopia. I can’t wait to see what exciting new worlds they will create based on our semester’s work together!